Lovers and masters: Guy's top 10 films of 2012
Counting down the year's best, from the multiplex to the festival fringes
And so it is that I've left it until the last day of the year to add my Top 10 list to the already teetering; I don't think I've ever left it so late before, and it certainly wasn't calculated on my part, though there's something pleasingly tidy about using New Year's Eve as an occasion to post a list that, in some ways, looks forward as much as it looks back. (Speaking of looking forward: in a break from tradition, the list is accompanied by a video countdown this year, so if you want my curious accent guiding you through, just press play.)
This is the space where I'm supposed to say it's been a good/bad/indifferent year for film, though I'm increasingly uncertain of how to answer that question. That's partly because of the way I compile my list: given that I occupy the no-man's-land territory of a European critic on an American site, release calendars are hard to keep up with and even harder to stick to, so I opt instead to include any new film I saw in 2012, whether as a theatrical release, on the festival circuit or somewhere in between.
Yes, that means there'll be some films in my Top 10 you may not have had an opportunity to see yet -- but I hope you'll see that not as irritating exclusivity, but as planting a flag for films you'd be wise to look out for in 2013. As such, my cinematic year tilts differently from how it would if I were a ticket-buying film fan; my first impulse, as I compare the following list to last year's edition, is to say this year's hasn't quite matched the standard of 2011. Then again, many of my favorites from last year's ended up as highlights of the 2012 release calendar. (At the end of this Top 10, I've included an adjusted list of the year's best US theatrical releases which is frankly better.) Take it as you will -- the bottom line is, it's all great stuff, in any year.
I further doubted my initial estimation of the year's quality when I began whittling down the list to a scant 10 titles -- well over 30 titles made the initial shortlist, and I'm as surprised as anyone about some of the titles I've omitted. I'm made a point of not using the word "best" in titling this list, and there's a reason for that: I'm pretty sure some of the films that didn't make the cut are more accomplished and complete than some of the films that did -- yet somehow, when push came to shove, they didn't prompt quite the same degree of attention or affection.
It was a heart-led process, yet it was still heartbreaking leaving out some titles: I'm suspicious of any professional critic who can't find more than 10 films to love in 365 days. I fully intend to follow the example of some of my HitFix colleagues in following up this list with a second 10 -- from "Holy Motors" to "Pitch Perfect," I'm too devoted to the runners-up to let the year go without bidding them a formal farewell.
Still, here are the 10 left standing. They're a rum bunch, and some of the survivors surprised me as much as they may surprise you -- but as the more I consider them together, the more I see unexpected throughlines emerging: broken love stories, haphazard families, fragile power ladders. I could continue, but it's time to let the film's speak for themselves. You can count down with me in video format above, or scroll through it in more traditional form below. Either way, enjoy.
#10

"MIRROR MIRROR"
Directed by Tarsem Singh
Fairytales are back in fashion in Hollywood, so we can safely expect a lot of humorlessly "dark" reimaginings and smartass revisionism – but hopefully some will follow the lead of Tarsem’s joyously silly spin on Snow White, the lightest and loveliest of three tellings of the same tale this year. Though its tongue is firmly in cheek (chiefly that of Julia Roberts, lending some contemporary diva snap to the Wicked Queen figure) its modern-day interjections don't come at the expense of old-school romance and wonder -- with jaw-dropping costumes by the late, great Eiko Ishioka providing much of the latter. As he proved with last year's rapturously daft Hellenic spectacle "Immortals," Tarsem remains one of the industry’s most extravagant fantasists, and he’s conjured genuine child’s-eye magic here. (Full review here.)
#9

"LORE"
Directed by Cate Shortland
The long-awaited second feature from “Somersault” director Cate Shortland was Australia’s submission for the foreign-language Oscar and that, combined with the all-too-unfairly dreaded words "Holocaust film," may have led some to expect granola-flavoured awards bait. But this bracing, sensual coming-of-age story surprises and disconcerts us by adopting a different victim's perspective: that of a brittle, brainwashed Nazi teenager, abandoned by all known authority figures and struggling to make sense of what remains in the dying days of WWII. Balancing the title's character's slow confrontation of her prejudices with her natural sexual awakening -- drawn with the same crisp candor as in her debut -- Shortland offers us no easy redemption or simple sympathies; if not seen with new eyes, this is history felt with fresh skin. (Longer review here.)
#8

"TAKE THIS WALTZ"
Directed by Sarah Polley
Another sophomore feature from a vibrant female auteur, Sarah Polley’s messy, sexy, excitingly divisive “Take This Waltz” is a relationship drama as expressive and sweat-stained as “Away From Her” was subtle and snowbound. (If the mind-melting fug of summer has ever been more tangibly depicted on screening, I don't recall the film.) Smartly dissecting the breakdown of a seemingly ideal marriage with even-handed warmth and an unexpectedly dayglo palette, Polley's brazenly poetic script makes refreshingly adult admissions to the irrational, even unreasonable nature of human desire. Michelle Williams and a revelatory Seth Rogen are superb in what one might call an electric-blue valentine, and you’ll never hear “Video Killed the Radio Star?” quite the same way again. All that, and it's not Polley's only great film of 2012. (Longer review here.)
#7

"OUR CHILDREN"
Directed by Joachim Lafosse
A far more sombre study of a household in crisis, Belgian auteur Joachim Lafosse’s devastating “Our Children” is still seeking a US distributor. Someone needs to fix that. Sadly inspired by a true-life case, this emotional body-blow of a film tells the story of a young wife and mother driven to the unthinkable by a combination of post-partum depression and less diagnosable domestic oppression; beginning at the unspeakable end, Lafosse patiently builds the unforgiving tension of a thriller as he traces a tragic family history from the flush of first love to far more smothering forms of intimacy; Émilie Dequenne, a richly deserving Cannes prizewinner this year, may deliver the performance of the year as a woman watching all psychological escape routes close before her eyes. It demands to be seen, but maybe not on a first date. (Longer review here.)
#6

"SISTER"
Directed by Ursula Meier
The third foreign-language Oscar submission on this list (and the one to crack the shortlist), Ursula Meier’s “Sister” has prompted understandable critical comparisons to the work of the Dardenne brothers -- though I'd actually take The Kid With The Skis over "The Kid With a Bike." Sharp, spry and sneakily moving, with a staying power that belies its modest form, this study of working-class survival on the moneyed ski slopes of Switzerland is impressive enough before it subtly morphs into a genuinely surprising family melodrama, making sense of that cryptic title. In a strong year for child performers, no newcomer struck a brighter spark than Kacey Mottet Klein as the modern-day Artful Dodger at the film's center; master DP Agnes Godard's camera is equally attuned to the finest contrasts in social standing and the white-on-white shifts of sun on snow. (Longer review here.)
2012-2013 OSCAR PREDICTIONS
Best Picture
Best Director
Best Actor
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor
Best Supporting Actress
Best Adapted Screenplay
Best Original Screenplay
Best Cinematography
Best Costume Design
Best Film Editing
Best Makeup And Hairstyling
Best Original Score
Best Original Song
Best Production Design
Best Sound Editing
Best Sound Mixing
Best Visual Effects
Best Animated Feature Film
Best Documentary Feature
Best Foreign Language Film
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Next 64 CommentsLola
December 31, 2012 at 3:07PM EST Reply to CommentWe know deep down Joyful Noise is #1 . Queen Latifah and Dolly Parton truly made 'joyful noise' in 2012.
Me.
December 31, 2012 at 3:14PM EST Reply to CommentMirror Mirror?! Da Fuck?
Monty Jack One of my WORST films of the year, with a deeply smug, irritating performance by Julia Roberts. It didn't even *look* good, which is usually a given for a Tarsem film...it had all of the visual "magic" of a 1995 ABC Sunday night movie. Snow White & The Huntsman was far more entertaining and better-looking, and that from a first-time director.
December 31, 2012 at 11:39PM ESTJJ1 "didn't even *look* good, which is usually a given for a Tarsem film...it had all of the visual "magic" of a 1995 ABC Sunday night movie."
January 1, 2013 at 11:03AM ESTHa! Um, bingo.
Brent Johnson Guy, hated Les Miserables, but loved Mirror, Mirror and The Master ( very long, out of control, and dreadful) ? Magic Mike is likable, but not a wonderful. Their has to be a moratorium on Michelle Williams ( Take This Waltz) portraying these same miserable characters. If this is all Williams can do acting-wise, this poor lady's acting career is in serious trouble.
January 1, 2013 at 12:36PM ESTGlennAU MIRROR MIRROR is fantastic. Such a shame people were too busy conjuring up pithy one-liners than indulging in its candy-coloured, good-hearted sweetness.
January 1, 2013 at 8:35PM ESTsquasher88
December 31, 2012 at 3:43PM EST Reply to CommentGuy really loves his Tarsem Singh.
Me. But I mean, after bitching about how Holy Motors didn't win anything at Cannes, it's dumb that he doesn't put it on his list and that, instead, he favours that thing.
December 31, 2012 at 3:49PM ESTGuy Lodge I still think Holy Motors was the best film in Competition at Cannes. Nothing in this list contradicts that.
January 1, 2013 at 5:58PM ESTJLPatt
December 31, 2012 at 3:48PM EST Reply to CommentI was expecting "Sister," and I got it. Thank you. I'm actually starting to see it appear on more top 10 lists. What a gem.
thekingbulletin
December 31, 2012 at 3:56PM EST Reply to CommentThat image from "Berberian Sound Studio" is SICK. So upset I missed that one at the New York Film Festival. Hopefully it doesn't take too long for the film to come back around to the US.
Liz I was thinking the same thing. That image alone has just tripled my interest in seeing this movie.
December 31, 2012 at 4:32PM ESTGlennAU It's a fantastic film. Screened at my local international film festival to relatively quiet first screening interest and after that became the must see film of the fest as we all talked about how great it was. Fantastic film.
January 1, 2013 at 8:36PM ESTmeep
December 31, 2012 at 4:07PM EST Reply to CommentAlps, Take This Waltz, Snowtown Murders and The Master are all on my "Best" short-list at the moment, but the rest of these are still on my need-to-see list. I HAVE to get busy.
RichardZ
December 31, 2012 at 4:26PM EST Reply to CommentI wouldn't call it a DayGlo palette; but it was unique.
Take This Waltz was a remarkable film.
I am wondering why it never caught on in the awards season.
Mykill
December 31, 2012 at 4:43PM EST Reply to CommentWonderful list Guy, as usual. I would argue that I actually like your official top ten list more than the one populated with U.S. theatrical releases. Not because the other list doesn't have excellent films on it, but I think the top ten that you've chosen seem like a more unified set of films that tell a more complete story in a way, while the other one just seems more of a hodgepodge of films. Regardless, I think your list(s) is typically unique and unlike any other top ten list that I've seen so far this year (and I have a few of your films show up on my own favorite of the year list.)
I still need to watch Take This Waltz on netflix (I swear I am going to add it to the top of my queue now) but I cannot wait to see Berberian Sound Studio, In the House, and Our Children. Hopefully we won't have to wait too long next year for those films to be distributed here. I don't know why, but Lore just doesn't seem to interest me at all despite the glowing reviews and the gorgeous trailer, but maybe one day I will get around to seeing that film. All the other films I've seen and I definitely liked or loved them.
I actually just saw Tabu based on your year-long championing of the film and I really enjoyed it a lot. I didn't find the "paradise lost" section as engaging as the "paradise" section, but as a whole I found the film very entertaining. The music choices in the film were awesome and I really want to find some of those portuguese versions of the 60's songs that were played. I found the sound design very interesting where only the dialogue was silent but most of the other natural sounds were heard (in addition to the narration and music, obviously.)
I know a lot of people will poke fun at you for including Mirror Mirror, just like they did last year for including Immortals, but I am right there with you on both films. I actually think Mirror Mirror is even more accomplished and maintains this very engaging whimsical/romantic tone that never takes itself seriously, and Julia Roberts was a stitch (probably the first performance of hers that I haven't nearly rolled my eyes out of my socket from watching in years.) I loved the bollywood musical sequence set to the cover of "I Believe" at the end - I felt like the entire film built up to just that moment and it was such a wonderful payoff.
Just because the year is now officially over, here is my top 15 films of the year:
1. Holy Motors (Leos Carax)
2. Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)
3. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
4. Amour (Michael Haneke)
5. Damsels in Distress (Whit Stillman)
6. Wreck-It Ralph (Rich Moore)
7. Room 237 (Rodney Ascher)
8. Mirror Mirror (Tarsem Singh)
9. Cloud Atlas (Tom Tykwer and Lana & Andy Wachowski)
10. The Bay (Barry Levinson)
11. The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Stephen Chbosky)
12. Magic Mike (Steven Soderbergh)
13. Paranorman (Chris Butler and Sam Fell)
14. Samsara (Ron Fricke)
15. I Wish (Hirokazu Kore-eda)
carbo25 Why don't you and Guy just get married already?
December 31, 2012 at 5:01PM ESTCARBOSTFU why don't you shut the fuck up carbo
December 31, 2012 at 5:21PM ESTGuy Lodge Thanks, Michael. I'm looking forward to seeing The Bay, a film to which I've heard wildly differing reactions. And for what it's worth, Holy Motors is my #11 -- it wasn't fun leaving it out.
January 1, 2013 at 5:55PM ESTCarbo25: God forbid someone should enjoy our content and let us know that from time to time. Whose comment has brought more to the conversation?
Laura Stewart Great list, MyKill.
January 2, 2013 at 3:32AM ESTMykill Thanks Guy - I can imagine it was difficult to leave off Holy Motors, but your top ten was very well chosen (and #11 isn't a bad spot to be in when there are so many good films to choose from.) If you ever seek out The Bay, I'm curious to know what your reaction is. It's not for everyone, but I found the setting to be really well-depicted and the usage of multiple types of media to be really ingenuously compiled together (plus the gore was really fun too.) It's definitely the most wtf film since nothing from Barry Levinson's past films would have indicated he was planning a found footage horror film with no established actors in it. I think it was sorely overlooked but that happens.
January 2, 2013 at 10:12AM ESTThanks Laura Stewart! I may have missed it, but have you posted your top 10 list as well? I'm curious to know how the year in film turned out for you (I have a feeling The Master may make an appearance somewhere near the top of your list...)
Jack
December 31, 2012 at 5:37PM EST Reply to CommentStill have yet to see Holy Motors, Zero Dark 30, and Amour
1. The Master
2. Silver Linings Playbook
3. Django Unchained
4. Magic Mike
5. 21 Jump Street
6. The Dark Knight Rises
7. Cabin in the Woods
8. Les Miserables
9. Klown
10. The Comedy
Guy Lodge Very interesting list. I still haven't had an opportunity to see Klown -- looking forward.
January 1, 2013 at 6:23PM ESTDooby
December 31, 2012 at 5:57PM EST Reply to CommentI adore all the ones that you've included that I've seen - Lore, Take This Waltz, Our Children, Sister, Magic Mike & Tabu. Excellent list in my humble opinion. Can't wait to catch up on the rest!
BD
December 31, 2012 at 6:07PM EST Reply to CommentGreat taste and always lets me discover more films I didn't even know existed but...
Mirror Mirror? Really? And the words Magic Mike and Comedy don't go together at all. Not funny, not good, not anything.
Guy Lodge Just curious: did you see Mirror Mirror?
January 1, 2013 at 5:52PM ESTBD Yes I did...
January 1, 2013 at 6:09PM ESTGuy Lodge Ah, fair enough. I wasn't sure if your "really" was incredulous or merely sceptical.
January 1, 2013 at 6:21PM ESTJuanL
December 31, 2012 at 8:33PM EST Reply to CommentYES!!! Francois Ozon. That
Chad Hartigan
December 31, 2012 at 9:40PM EST Reply to CommentGreat list as always, Guy. Even though TAKE THIS WALTZ is one of the worst films I saw in 2012.
Guy Lodge Thanks, Chad. I'm fascinated by how polarising Take This Waltz is -- but I can completely understand why many viewers are allergic to its tone.
January 1, 2013 at 5:51PM ESTLaura Stewart Agreed with Chad. It was like Blue Valentine, if Blue Valentine sucked.
January 2, 2013 at 3:33AM ESTforg
December 31, 2012 at 10:58PM EST Reply to CommentGlad you have Mirror Mirror on your list. Despite the bad reviews and all I still find it the better "Snow White" movie this year.
Matthew Starr
December 31, 2012 at 11:21PM EST Reply to CommentI missed Our Children and Sound Studio at NYFF and Sister I've been meaning to see. For those interested in NYC, Lore will be playing at Film Society on Jan 3, just one screening as part of their foreign awards hopefuls series.
Silencio
January 1, 2013 at 6:29AM EST Reply to CommentWhatever reason Wuthering Heights has not come to my town yet, it's killing me. I've been waiting a flipping year. Thanks for the suggestions though. Tabu is on my list now.
Guy Lodge My fingers are crossed that it doesn't take over a year to reach you!
January 1, 2013 at 5:49PM ESTdaveylo
January 1, 2013 at 12:41PM EST Reply to CommentI really liked In the House. I think it is one of Ozon's best films. When is it being distributed in the United States?
I need to see Tabu.
The one film I couldn't stand was The Master.
Guy Lodge I don't think Cohen Media Group have set a date for In the House yet, but they will be releasing it in 2013.
January 1, 2013 at 5:48PM ESTAndrew F
January 1, 2013 at 1:04PM EST Reply to CommentI always love Guy's lists. They're brazenly idiosyncratic. "You don't like Magic Mike? BAM. I DON'T CARE, I LOVED IT."
Stormshadow4life
January 1, 2013 at 4:25PM EST Reply to CommentI am pretty sure out of all of your top 10 U.S. theatrical releases of the year....only The Master and Magic Mike played anywhere near me. In fact, I never even heard of the other 8 movies....but something tells me my tastes lay more in line with Drew anyway
Guy Lodge Well, I like a number of the movies on Drew's list too. It needn't be an either/or proposition!
January 1, 2013 at 5:46PM ESTAnd I'm pretty sure Mirror Mirror must have played somewhere near you, though I understand if you chose not to see it.
Guy Lodge By the way, I can relate to an extent. The city I mostly grew up in (Johannesburg, South Africa) did have an arthouse cinema, but its programming was largely limited to the mainstream end of the spectrum -- and even that we tended to get months, if not years, after Europe and the US. So I know the frustration of reading glowing reports of movies one has no immediate way of viewing.
January 1, 2013 at 6:19PM ESTMoving to London eight years ago was like being handed the keys to the candy store -- ditto the opportunities the last four years have given me to attend international film festivals. I know I'm privileged that way, and I know my list reflects that to an extent -- but I'm singling out these films because I love them, not because they're harder to access.
In any event, things are getting better with home viewing options and VOD, so I hope, as I said in the intro, that readers will look at the inclusion of a film like "In the House" as a bookmark for future reference, and perhaps seek it out when it comes around.
Stormshadow4life Mirror Mirror wasn't on your US Release list. But you are correct, I chose to skip that movie (I do like The Cell, and Loved The Fall though!).
January 1, 2013 at 11:36PM ESTI will look into the movies you listed that I never heard of. I just find it a little strange that I've only heard of them here....makes me wonder if other critics simply haven't yet seen these, or if your taste is a bit outside the norm. I'd be interested in finding out!
Stormshadow4life Actually saw Take This Waltz last night via Amazon Prime. Found the movie to be quite beautiful, but sad. I don't think it would have made my top 10, but certainly worth watching
January 2, 2013 at 2:03PM ESTAdrian
January 1, 2013 at 4:46PM EST Reply to CommentAwesome list, Guy! I'm excited to see we share two films in our top 10's: Take this Waltz and Tabu. Amazing movies! I also really really liked Our Children as well. Officially stoked, as well, to see Sister, Berberian Sound Studio and In the House. The Master is already my most anticipated for 2013.
GlennAU
January 1, 2013 at 8:39PM EST Reply to CommentExcellent list, Guy! Loved seeing MIRROR MIRROR, LORE, and SISTER on there especially. And as much as I hated TAKE THIS WALTZ, that "Video Killed the Radio Star" scene is just heaven.
via collins
January 2, 2013 at 1:10AM EST Reply to CommentAs many have commented, by no means a great year of cinema, but an endlessly interesting one. It's quite amazing what a broad spectrum of films are crossing over in the end of year lists. Perhaps my biggest regret of the year was seeing TABU in a tired and grumpy frame of mind, and clearly missing its beauties. Need to redress that one if I can at some stage. My 10 went like this:
1. Holy Motors
2. Wish You Were Here (needs so much more attention)
3. Margaret
4. Bernie
5. Hugo
6. Side By Side
7. L'Amour
8. Killing Them Softly
9. The Avengers
10. Journal de France
Release dates out of kilter as always, and I just noticed that bizarre run of single Christian-name titles in the list - Lonergan, Linklater and Scorcese respectively.
Hope 2013 is a vintage to remember!
Mykill Great List! I haven't seen Side By Side yet, but I've heard good things. I've honestly never heard of Wish You Were Here before and after I just looked it up it seems really intriguing. I hope it gets distribution in the US b/c I'd really like to see it.
January 2, 2013 at 10:18AM ESTGautam
January 2, 2013 at 1:52AM EST Reply to CommentGuy, Can't comment if this is a great list of films since I haven't seen 5 of them but definitely it's a brave list.
Amongst your Top 10, three feature in my Best 10, but two also are in my most disappointing of the year - Take This Waltz [frustrating tale of nothingness] and Magic Mike [ wafer thin plot held somehow by showiness]
My Top 10 goes like this ..
1. Zero Dark Thirty
2. The Perks of Being Wallflower
3. The Impossible
4. Tabu
5. Django Unchained
6. The Master
7. Alps
8. Moonrise Kingdom
9. Beasts of Southern Wild
10. Gangs of Wasseypur
Honorable Mentions: The Loneliest Planet, Barfi!
By the way, I know it's late, but did you get a chance to see Barfi! ?
Pete
January 2, 2013 at 2:13AM EST Reply to CommentAlso, the top 10 most boring movies. These film critics are the worst. They always like the movies no one watches or likes. They deliberately pick these movies to show that they're different from the mainstream. Such idiotic behavior.
Thomas "They deliberately pick these movies to show that they're different from the mainstream. Such idiotic behavior."
January 3, 2013 at 3:16PM ESTThat would be idiotic - if that's what they were doing. But do you wanna know what would be even more idiotic - making assumptions about things you can't possibly know.
For example - assuming that you know that critics choose the movies they choose to "be different," and not because they actually consider them the best movies of the year? That's idiotic.
And I certainly hope you've seen all ten of these movies if you're calling them the "top 10 most boring" of the year. Otherwise, well, it would also be idiotic to condemn movies as boring if you haven't seen them.
"These film critics are the worst."
Yeah, man. Especially when you start out with the assumption that they couldn't possible like movies that you haven't heard of, so they must always be pretending when they praise anything that's not made in Hollywood and that didn't make $100 million dollars or more.
MattAwards
January 2, 2013 at 3:28AM EST Reply to CommentI am really happy to see Take This Waltz on your list. It is one of the most underrated films of the year. It is unfortunate that Michelle Williams is not being recognized during awards season.
www.mattawards.com
Laura Stewart
January 2, 2013 at 3:31AM EST Reply to CommentI fully expected Pitch Perfect. Maybe I'm wrong, but didn't you rave about it? Loved it myself.
Mykill I just watched it again last night randomly enough and I think I liked it even more the second time. Rebel Wilson is so effortlessly funny, but the rest of the cast does really good work too.
January 2, 2013 at 10:14AM ESTAndrew Rech
January 2, 2013 at 5:33AM EST Reply to CommentI love this list! Only seen exactly half of it but unique, thoughtful, top 10's like these always make me actively seek out new things to watch. I actually went and saw Mirror Mirror last spring, purely because of how much you raved about and I never would have seen it otherwise. Didn't love it like you did but still thought it was worth seeing.
I think the Take This Waltz inclusion may be my favorite though. Saw it on Netflix a week ago and I can't stop thinking about it. I will never be able to listen "Video Killed the Radio Star" the same way again and Sarah Silverman's final scene has haunted me continuously ever since. Can't wait to see your picks in the individual categories!
Joseph
January 2, 2013 at 10:21AM EST Reply to CommentAlways look forward to your list, Guy. Great individual choices. Nice to see Magic Mike. Will be in my top five as well. I think it deserves editing and cinematography attention as well.
Question for you. Saw the Academy list of qualifying films. The Hunt (Mikkelsen would be in my top 5) and Wuthering Heights aren't on it. Are they being released in the US in 2013?
Guy Lodge The Hunt will be a 2013 release, I believe. (And I expect Denmark will submit it for Best Foreign Language Film -- I'm willing to make an early bet it gets nominated.)
January 2, 2013 at 12:04PM ESTWuthering Heights was released in 2012, but I guess it wasn't submitted for consideration. Pity -- it should win Best Cinematography in a walk, for my money.
x
January 2, 2013 at 3:06PM EST Reply to CommentI'd prefer Pieta over Lore.. or the patience stone over tabu.
Free
January 2, 2013 at 4:13PM EST Reply to CommentI'm sorry, but I found Mirror Mirror to be a terrible film, worse than Snow White and the Huntsman.
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